The reason for this? Reading their annual reports (latest here), it seems that generals just aren't very good at running cafes.

There's an argument for the NZDF or a subsidiary body to run base shops where there's nothing else around - in Scott Base, for example (though really, given the terms of the Antarctic Treaty, that should be under the NZ Antarctic institute, not NZDF). But most of the AFCC's business is done in places like Devonport and Linton and Waiouru and Trentham, where there are plenty of other options. They even run the Waiouru Four Square, which isn't even on the base - its on State Highway One, catering to tourists, not soldiers.

I oppose privatisation. But here it seems like there's not even a shred of a case for government ownership of most of these facilities. If soldiers want a flat white or moro bar (or, apparently, a washing machine or digital camera), there's no reason for a special statutory body to provide it to them. They can go to a shop like anybody else. And it'll probably be cheaper - AFCC consistently complains about its inability to compete with other retailers.

The Armed Forces Canteen Council's predecessor, the Canteen Board, was founded to provide basic facilities to conscripted soldiers in vast military camps or on deployment overseas. But there's just no need for it in peacetime. Time to put it out of its misery.